Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PART I THE ECUMENICAL PATRIARCHATE
- PART II THE RUSSIAN CHURCH
- 11 Russian piety and Orthodox culture 1380–1589
- 12 Art and liturgy in Russia: Rublev and his successors
- 13 Eastern Orthodoxy in Russia and Ukraine in the age of the Counter-Reformation
- 14 The Russian Orthodox Church in imperial Russia 1721–1917
- 15 Russian piety and culture from Peter the Great to 1917
- PART III EASTERN CHRISTIANITIES
- PART IV THE MODERN WORLD
- Bibliography
- Index
- References
15 - Russian piety and culture from Peter the Great to 1917
from PART II - THE RUSSIAN CHURCH
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- PART I THE ECUMENICAL PATRIARCHATE
- PART II THE RUSSIAN CHURCH
- 11 Russian piety and Orthodox culture 1380–1589
- 12 Art and liturgy in Russia: Rublev and his successors
- 13 Eastern Orthodoxy in Russia and Ukraine in the age of the Counter-Reformation
- 14 The Russian Orthodox Church in imperial Russia 1721–1917
- 15 Russian piety and culture from Peter the Great to 1917
- PART III EASTERN CHRISTIANITIES
- PART IV THE MODERN WORLD
- Bibliography
- Index
- References
Summary
Paradigms and stereotypes
Peter the Great’s desire to transform his empire through a broad array of modernizing reforms helped to shape the course of Russian history for the next two centuries. Among the great leader’s notable achievements, the construction of a European-style capital facing westwards, the creation of a standing army, the introduction of a regularised system of taxation and the reorganisation of higher education often overshadow the importance of Peter’s reform of the Orthodox faith. Tension between secular and religious authority was not new to Russia. The destructive conclusion of the mid-seventeenth-century struggle between the overbearing Patriarch Nikon and Tsar Aleksei Mikhailovich ostensibly over reforms in ritual practice ended disastrously for the patriarch, who was unseated, and for the church, which was rent by schism. Those accepting reform were considered to be proper Orthodox Christians, while those defending the existing rituals were soon branded Old Believers, Old Ritualists or schismatics (starovery, staroobriadtsy, raskol’niki). Although the schism of 1666–67 produced some of Russia’s most colourful religious figures, among them self-immolators and flagellants, any lingering doubts about ultimate secular authority were resolved between 1700, when the young Tsar Peter failed to replace the recently deceased Patriarch Adrian, and the enactment of the Spiritual Regulation in 1721 that replaced the patriarchate with the secular administrative apparatus of the holy synod.
Peter’s ecclesiastical reforms were left incomplete yet unchallenged at the time of his death. Throughout the eighteenth century, state policy sought to define and contain the institutions and expressions of Orthodox Christianity in the secular terms of Enlightenment thought that reached its apogee during the reign of Catherine the Great.
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- The Cambridge History of Christianity , pp. 348 - 370Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006